Transiting exoplanets from the CoRoT space mission: VII. The "hot-Jupiter"-type planet CoRoT-5b
H. Rauer, D. Queloz, Sz. Csizmadia, M. Deleuil, R. Alonso, S. Aigrain,, J. M. Almenara, M. Auvergne, A. Baglin, P. Barge, P. Borde, F. Bouchy, H., Bruntt, J. Cabrera, L. Carone, S. Carpano, R. De la Reza, H. J. Deeg, R., Dvorak, A. Erikson, M. Fridlund, D. Gandolfi, M. Gillon

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and characterization of CoRoT-5b, a hot Jupiter exoplanet detected by the CoRoT space mission, including its physical parameters and orbital details, based on photometric and radial velocity data.
Contribution
First detection of CoRoT-5b, a hot Jupiter, using CoRoT's photometric data and follow-up radial velocity measurements, providing detailed planetary and orbital parameters.
Findings
CoRoT-5b is a hot Jupiter with a radius of 1.388 R_Jup.
CoRoT-5b has a mass of 0.467 M_Jup.
The planet orbits its star every 4.0379 days.
Abstract
Aims. The CoRoT space mission continues to photometrically monitor about 12 000 stars in its field-of-view for a series of target fields to search for transiting extrasolar planets ever since 2007. Deep transit signals can be detected quickly in the "alarm-mode" in parallel to the ongoing target field monitoring. CoRoT's first planets have been detected in this mode. Methods. The CoRoT raw lightcurves are filtered for orbital residuals, outliers, and low-frequency stellar signals. The phase folded lightcurve is used to fit the transit signal and derive the main planetary parameters. Radial velocity follow-up observations were initiated to secure the detection and to derive the planet mass. Results. We report the detection of CoRoT-5b, detected during observations of the LRa01 field, the first long-duration field in the galactic anticenter direction. CoRoT-5b is a "hot Jupiter-type"…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
